Death toll from asylum boat sinking rises as Australia accuses people smugglers of lying about PNG policy

A young asylum seeker is brought ashore after this week's boat sinking

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The number of people confirmed dead in the latest boat tragedy off Indonesia rose to 13 overnight as Home Affairs Minister Jason Clare accused people smugglers of lying to asylum seekers about Australia's 'PNG solution'.

Mr Clare said he had heard reports that people smugglers were telling would-be asylum seekers they should get on a boat now, before the first plane left for Manus Island.

Prime Minister Kevin Rudd has announced that all asylum seekers arriving to Australia by boat will be sent to PNG for processing, and that people found to be refugees would be resettled there.

Key points

Death toll from this week's asylum boat sinking rises to 13

Boat with 75 passengers on board intercepted NNE of Christmas Island

Jason Clare says people smugglers telling asylum seekers they won't be sent to PNG

More than 600 asylum seekers have arrived since the PNG plan was unveiled

More than 600 asylum seekers have arrived in Australian waters since Mr Rudd announced the PNG policy, and yesterday the PM warned that thousands of people a year could drown at sea if action was not taken to deter them from embarking on the perilous journey to Australia.

This morning Australian authorities confirmed that another boat, carrying 75 asylum seekers, had been intercepted north north-east of Christmas Island on Wednesday.

Mr Clare said people smugglers were encouraging people not to cancel their voyage, saying there was a prospect of a High Court challenge to the policy, and impediments in Federal Parliament.

"Every lie you can think of is now being told to encourage people to get onto boats," he said.

Mr Clare also joined former Defence Force chief Chris Barrie in criticising the Coalition's border protection policy, saying it was a distraction from saving lives at sea.

The Opposition has announced a plan to give a military commander oversight of border protection and people smuggling operations, suggesting it would give a clearer chain of command and ensure better coordination between agencies.

Mr Barrie said a two-star admiral already coordinated border protection and the change would do little to deter people smugglers.

And Mr Clare told Channel Nine that the plan for a military commander to report directly to the government was nothing new.

Death toll rises after Java sinking, traumatised survivors back in Indonesia

The death toll from the sinking of an asylum seeker boat off Java rose to 13 after two more bodies were found late yesterday.

The boy's father, Sri Lankan man Naradasa Balamanaran, told the ABC that he first knew that his wife and only child were on the boat when she called him to say it had sunk.

Balamanaran, who has been working as a labourer in a factory since he came to Australia in 2009, said that his son's body was among those retrieved, but that he did not know where it had been taken.

Indonesian politicians allege lack of consultation on PNG deal

Separately, Indonesian politicians vented their anger about Australia's lack of consultation over the PNG policy.

A leading Indonesian opposition politician said fellow MPs had complained that Mr Rudd did not consult with Jakarta before announcing the deal to resettle asylum seekers in Papua New Guinea, despite there being serious implications for Indonesia.

Tantowi Yahya, a member of Indonesia's Foreign Affairs Commission, said most of the group's 35 members had complained about Indonesia not being consulted on Australia's policy shift.

If Kevin Rudd doesn't go to see the Governor-General this weekend, there will be plenty of people willing to say afterwards that he should have done so.

The leadership is refreshed, party reform underway, the intervention in NSW announced, the carbon tax set to be abolished, and the asylum seekers issue in better shape than it was.

Barrie Cassidy suggests that any time now wasted outside a formal campaign can only erode the initial burst of support built on the departure of Julia Gillard and the emergence of an alternative to Tony Abbott.

A spokeswoman for Mr Rudd said the PM spoke with Indonesian president Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono about the PNG deal this week.

According to a spokesman for Mr Yudhoyono, the president told Mr Rudd that people smuggling was not just one country’s problem and stressed the importance of regional co-operation.

Mr Rudd's spokeswoman confirmed that the conversation took place and the president's version of it was "not incorrect".

However, Mr Tantowi maintains that Mr Rudd only called the president after "we made some noise".

"Several government officials and politicians like myself protested and then your government responded by calling the president," he said.

This morning a spokesman for Foreign Affairs Minister Bob Carr said Senator Carr provided a broad outline of policies to his Indonesian counterpart Marty Natalegawa when he was in Sydney in the week before the PNG deal was announced.

He said Senator Carr also called Dr Natalegawa on the day of the announcement to provide more details.

Dr Natalegawa declined to comment on the PNG arrangement, however in the past he has said that Indonesia would not support policies that put the asylum seeker burden on Indonesia.

Mr Tantowi said the PNG deal did precisely that.

"Now the terms of burden sharing … it’s a burden of humanity that everyone should share and we really have to work together on it," Mr Tantowi said.

Defence community sceptical on Operation Sovereign Borders plan

Australia's Former Defence Force chief Chris Barrie has criticised the Coalition's plan to put a three-star military commander in charge of the drive to combat people smuggling and deter asylum seekers.

Under the plan, the three-star commander would have the powers to bypass normal Defence command structures and would report directly to the immigration minister.

But Admiral Barrie says a two-star admiral already coordinates border protection, and the Coalition's policy amounts to little more than a pay rise.

"We're going to pay someone a little bit more to do a similar job. It doesn't sound to me like a way of solving this problem," he told PM.

"How will a three-star appointment of this nature improve things when we've got a two-star admiral already assigned in border protection command, and a different agency and slightly different responsibilities?"

Where do the parties stand on asylum seeker policy?

The major parties are coming up with new strategies as Australia heads towards an election. Inform your vote and stay up-to-date using the ABC's policy explainer.